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Chemical Contaminants in the Coastal Environment

Chemical Contaminants in the Coastal Environment. Michael H. Fulton. Center for Coastal Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research. Presentation Objectives. Describe sources of chemical contaminants in the coastal environment

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Chemical Contaminants in the Coastal Environment

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  1. Chemical Contaminants in the Coastal Environment Michael H. Fulton Center for Coastal Environmental Health and Biomolecular Research

  2. Presentation Objectives • Describe sources of chemical contaminants in the coastal environment • Discuss the types and characteristics of chemical contaminants in the coastal environment • Discuss contaminant distribution and trends from a National and South Carolina perspective • Discuss Emerging Contaminant Issues

  3. Sources of Chemical Contaminants in the Coastal Environment

  4. Point Source Discharges • Industrial Discharges (paper mills, petroleum refineries, metal plating, chemical manufacturing)

  5. Point Sources • Point sources are permitted under the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) • NPDES allows chemical and toxicity limits to be set for point source discharges • Permit Programs are administered though EPA or authorized by state agencies (DHEC)

  6. Nonpoint Source Pollution • Agricultural Runoff • Runoff of herbicides, insecticides and fertilizers from farms

  7. Urban Runoff • Runoff of herbicides, insecticides and fertilizers from lawns and golf courses

  8. Urban Runoff • Runoff from roads and parking lots

  9. Nonpoint Source Pollution • Discharges from boats and marinas

  10. Chemical Contaminant Classes

  11. Inorganic Contaminants • Heavy metals • Mercury, lead, chromium, cadmium, arsenic • Natural sources, industrial processes, fuel additives, coal combustion, fungicides • Many different modes of action • Some are neurotoxins (lead, mercury) • Ecological effects and contaminated shellfish Shipyard Creek

  12. 2’ 3’ 3 2 4 4’ (Cl)n (Cl)n 5 5’ 6 6’ Organic contaminants • Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) • Chlorinated compounds • Previously used in transformers and lubricants • Persistent and bioaccumulate in the environment (degrade slowly and increase in the food chain) • Reproductive, immune system, and neurodevelopmental effects

  13. Cl Cl Cl Chlorinated Pesticides • DDT, Chlordane, Mirex • Persistent and bioaccumulate in the environment • Most banned in the US • Reproductive and neurological effects Cl Cl DDT

  14. Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs) • Crude and refined petroleum products • Combustion byproducts • Oil spills, internal combustion engines • Some are persistent • Some are carcinogenic Benzo[a]pyrene

  15. These four classes of compounds are the most widely sampled in coastal monitoring programs

  16. National Contaminant Monitoring Programs

  17. NOAA’s Status and Trends ProgramMussel Watch • 280 Coastal Sites • Sites are re-sampled over time • 1986-Present • 100 organic and inorganic Contaminants • Contaminants measured in sediments and shellfish (mussels and oysters) • Four sites in South Carolina

  18. EPA’s National Coastal Assessment (NCA) Program • Involves partnerships with State agencies • Water quality data • Sediment contaminants and toxicity • Benthic community (bottom dwelling organisms) assessments • Tissue contamination • Thousands of stations along the US coast • Randomly selected stations are sampled every year • Data collected since 1990

  19. Report on the condition of the nation’s estuarine waters and coastal fisheries • 2001, 2005, 2007 • EPA, NOAA, USGS, USFWS • Water quality, sediment quality (contamination and toxicity), benthic community, coastal habitat, fish contaminants • Uses data from NCA and Mussel Watch Programs

  20. National Trends • Mussel Watch Project (shellfish) • 1986-2003 • Few trends observed for many compounds • Decreasing trends for some banned compounds like chlorinated pesticides and PCBs

  21. National Trends • Coastal Condition Report • Sediment Quality (sediment contamination, toxicity, TOC) • Slight increase in the percent area with poor sediment quality … 10 14%

  22. South Carolina • South Carolina Estuarine and Coastal Assessment Program (SCECAP) • SCDNR, SCDHEC, EPA, NOAA • Program established in 1999

  23. SCECAP Objectives • Monitor the quality of all South Carolina estuaries • Water and sediment quality • Biological Condition • Develop integrated measures of habitat condition

  24. Approach • 60 randomly selected stations sampled every year • Half the stations in tidal creeks and half in larger open water bodies • Water quality, sediment quality (contaminants and toxicity), tissue contaminants, biological community assessments

  25. South Carolina Coastal Zone Sediment Contaminant Levels (SCECAP) 1999-2004 Georgetown Charleston Beaufort

  26. Charleston Sediment Contaminant Levels (SCECAP) 1999-2004

  27. Sediment Contamination (ERM-Q) 100 80 60 Percent of Coastal Habitat 40 20 0 Open Creek Open Creek Open Creek 2003-2004 2001-2002 1999-2000 Poor Good Fair

  28. Sediment Contaminants vs Percent Urban/Suburban Cover 90% < 0.020 80% >0.02 -0.058 > 0.058 70% 60% 50% Percent of Stations 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 0-30% 31-50% >50% N=178 N=39 N=59 Percent Urban/Suburban Land Cover Van Dolah et al., in prep

  29. Emerging Contaminants • Many contaminants entering estuaries are not included in routine monitoring programs and their potential to impact ecological and human health is largely unknown.

  30. Examples of Emerging Contaminants

  31. Pharmaceuticals • New area of environmental concern • Multiple sources of contamination • Sewage treatment is unsuccessful

  32. Pharmaceuticals • Measured in surface waters, groundwater, tap water, and sediments worldwide • Environmental concentrations similar to other organic pollutants such as agrochemicals • Currently no water quality standards

  33. Flame Retardants • Polybrominated Compounds (PBCs) • Used as flame retardants in household products, clothing and furniture • Detected in wildlife, sediments, mother’s milk, and human plasma • Persistent and may bioaccumulate in the environment • May affect neurological development and disrupt thyroid hormone

  34. Current-Use Pesticides • Since 1978, more than 130 new chemical active ingredients have been registered • Between 10-15 pesticide active ingredients are registered each year • Used in agriculture, turf grass management (golf courses), lawns and gardens, disease vector control, antifouling agents

  35. Oceans and Human Health Initiative Emerging Chemical Contaminants Program

  36. Objectives • Identify emerging contaminants of concern in the estuarine/marine environment • Develop methods needed to measure these contaminants in the environment • Evaluate the toxic effects of emerging contaminants in estuarine organisms as well as their potential to impact human health • Document the presence and distribution of these contaminants in the estuarine environment and develop risk assessments

  37. Examples of Current Research

  38. 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Bulls Shem Parrot Okatee Village Guerin North Inlet Albergottie New Market James Island Murrells Inlet Orange Grove ForestedSuburbanUrban Flame Retardants (PBDEs in Sediments) Total PBDE (ng/g dry wt)

  39. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Antifoulants

  40. Irgarol (antifoulant) concentrations in the Wando River, ng/L *

  41. How can we reduce NPS Pollution? • Use lawn and household pesticides in moderation and don’t exceed label directions……..more isn’t better • Don’t pour unwanted chemicals down the drain or on the ground……..take them to a hazardous waste collection center • Recycle used oil and have regular tune ups (boats and automobiles) • Be careful when refueling boats

  42. Thank You! Questions? Thank You!

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